MISSION BRIEF
Intercepted by: {{publication_name}}
Forty-three miles off Malaysia's eastern coastline, in a patch of open water called the Eastern Outer Port Limits, a Very Large Crude Carrier carrying 1.9 million barrels of Iranian oil sat waiting at anchor — AIS signal dark, hull unmarked under any flag a sanctions desk would recognize — until the USS Miguel Keith came over the horizon and US Marines rappelled onto her deck. The vessel was the MT Tifani. The date was April 21. MarineTraffic records show it had made that same run — Kharg Island to the EOPL, across the Indian Ocean, through the Malacca Strait — multiple times in the preceding twelve months.
The EOPL is not a port. It has no customs office, no harbormaster, no manifest trail that shows up in SWIFT reporting. What it has is space — and at any given time, according to United Against Nuclear Iran satellite imagery, dozens of ghost fleet tankers anchored in formation, hull to hull in the dark, conducting ship-to-ship transfers that repackage Iranian crude as Malaysian crude before it reaches Shandong province. UANI recorded 250 ship-to-ship transfers in that anchorage between January 1 and April 21 of this year alone. On April 1, 34 vessels on UANI's Ghost Armada list were loitering there with their AIS signals active — not hiding. Watching.
The MT Tifani was not alone. In the days surrounding its seizure, CENTCOM also intercepted the Iranian tankers Hero II, Hedy, Dorena, Deep Sea, and Sevin — all redirected or boarded in open Indian Ocean water, thousands of miles from the Persian Gulf, in waters under US Indo-Pacific Command. Kpler data shows Iran was still shipping 1.71 million barrels per day through April, against an average of 1.68 million bpd for all of 2025. The US blockade of Iranian ports went live on April 13. By late April, those exports had cratered to roughly 567,000 barrels per day as storage at Kharg Island approached capacity. Kpler analysts told Al Jazeera that Iran could run out of onshore crude storage inside three weeks if the blockade holds.
Iran has held two weapons simultaneously since February 28: control of the Strait of Hormuz, and a floating strategic reserve. According to Kpler data, Tehran had 191 million barrels stored at sea as of February — the vast majority parked in East Asian waters — which allowed it to keep exporting even as US and Israeli strikes pounded its infrastructure through March. That reserve is now under active interdiction across two oceans. The blockade has finally found its real target: not the strait, but the supply chain around it.
The IRGC, for its part, is not moving toward a deal. Iran's parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said this week Tehran has been "preparing new cards on the battlefield" and will not negotiate under threat. The ceasefire that briefly opened Hormuz on April 17 collapsed within 24 hours. The strait is closed again. Brent settled at $114.01 on Thursday — down from a wartime high of $126 hit earlier in the session.
Five years from now, there are going to be two types of retirees in America.
One is greeting strangers at Walmart in a blue vest. Not because they want to.
Because the war in Iran was the first domino that knocked their retirement sideways and they never saw it coming.
The other is sitting on a beach with a margarita. Not because they got lucky. Because they understood what the Iran war was really about and made one simple move.
Here's what most people are missing.
The war in Iran isn't about nukes. It's about oil being sold in yuan instead of dollars.
Every barrel that leaves the dollar system makes your savings worth less. And 40 countries are following Iran's lead.
The retiree at Walmart kept everything in the same 401(k) their advisor set up ten years ago. They watched the dollar weaken. They watched inflation eat their savings. They hoped somebody in Washington would fix it. Nobody did.
The retiree on the beach moved a portion of their retirement into the one asset that goes up when the dollar goes down. Took 15 minutes. No taxes. No penalties. And they slept fine while everyone else panicked.
Same starting point. Same savings. One decision made the difference.
A free report called "The Great Gold Reset" shows you exactly what the Iran war means for your dollars, why it's accelerating a shift that was already underway, and the simple move that separates the Walmart greeters from the beach retirees.
THE OPERATION
Two parallel blockades
The IRGC did not simply close the strait. It converted it into a revenue operation. Since March 13, according to Lloyd's List Intelligence AIS data, every vessel transit through the Strait of Hormuz has run through a single Iranian-controlled corridor — a tight channel threading through Iranian territorial waters around Larak Island — requiring advance documentation submission to IRGC intermediaries, geopolitical vetting, a clearance code delivered over VHF radio, and an IRGC escort vessel from entry to exit. Normal transit volume was 110 ships per day. In the week of March 15, Lloyd's List recorded 16 AIS-visible crossings. Windward separately confirmed eight dark ships — exceeding 290 meters in length — operating in the strait with transponders off.
At least two vessels have paid cash for that corridor. The toll: up to $2 million per transit, settled in Chinese yuan, brokered through a Chinese maritime services firm acting as intermediary. Iran's parliament has since moved to formalize the fee schedule into law. Iran's First Vice President put the logic plainly: "One cannot restrict Iran's oil exports while expecting free security for others." The IRGC remains a US-designated Foreign Terrorist Organization. Any company that routes payment through an IRGC intermediary is brushing against both OFAC sanctions and federal material-support statutes — a fact maritime lawyers have been flagging for weeks while their clients quietly ask for the clearance codes anyway.
Meanwhile, the US has been running its own blockade since April 13 — not on the strait itself, but on the entirety of Iran's coastline and ports, enforced by over 10,000 personnel across more than a dozen warships. The result is a dual chokehold: Iran controls the exit, the US controls the perimeter. Roughly 2,000 vessels are stranded in the Gulf, according to the International Maritime Organization, waiting for clearance from two rival naval forces that are not speaking to each other.
What Lloyd's List found when it ran the numbers on shadow fleet movements undercuts the official US account. CENTCOM says it has turned back over 20 vessels and halted Iranian trade. Lloyd's List Intelligence tracking shows at least 26 shadow fleet vessels bypassed the blockade — 12 of them after April 16 when the blockade terms were widened — moving in both directions across the line. The US Navy has since moved the interdiction theater east, hunting these ships in open Indian Ocean water where there are no mines, no IRGC fast boats, and no political complications with Omani territorial waters. The tactic is deliberate: let them run, then take them in open sea.
Goldman Sachs estimates 11 million barrels per day of Gulf crude production has been taken offline since the war began, with Middle East export volumes falling from 15 million bpd to an effective 7 million bpd. Global inventories drew down by 85 million barrels in March alone. The EIA projects Brent could peak near $115 per barrel in Q2 2026 before easing — assuming some form of resolution. There is no resolution on the horizon. The back end of the crude futures curve is pricing in normalization the front end knows is not coming.
The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve has been releasing barrels to cushion domestic supply — but the SPR has been drawn down sharply over the past four years, and what's left is finite. Iran is still exporting its own crude through the IRGC corridor while locking out the rest of the Gulf. Saudi Arabia's East-West pipeline to Yanbu on the Red Sea is running near capacity. The UAE's Fujairah bypass pipeline can move 1.8 million barrels per day. Combined, they cannot replace what Hormuz carried. Not close.
RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
Your exposure
The AAA national average for a gallon of regular gasoline stood at $4.39 as of May 1 — up from $3.99 on March 30, and up from roughly $3.05 a year ago. WTI crude is trading near $105 per barrel this morning, against a January opening price of $61. The Brent-WTI spread peaked at $25 per barrel on March 31 — its widest in over five years — as US refiners drawing on domestic production partially decoupled from the global price shock. That gap has since narrowed, but the structural driver remains: every barrel that does not exit the Persian Gulf is a barrel the market has to replace from somewhere else, at a higher cost, over a longer route.
The EIA's weekly petroleum status report for the week ending April 24 showed US crude stocks fell 6.2 million barrels — while US crude exports simultaneously hit a record 6.44 million barrels per day as American producers rushed supply to markets starved by the Hormuz closure. The inventory draw and the export record in the same week tells you where the pressure is: domestic stocks are tightening even as American barrels flow out. Diesel is above $5.40 per gallon nationally. Distillate crack spreads at New York Harbor averaged $1.42 per gallon in March — more than double the five-year average. Every truck that moves goods across this country runs on diesel.
Gas was $3.05 a year ago. It is $4.39 today and moving higher as Kharg Island storage fills, Iranian production cuts approach, and two opposing naval blockades hold 2,000 vessels in the Gulf with no resolution in sight — and your financial advisor is going to tell you this is geopolitical volatility that will resolve itself, which is another way of saying he hasn't read the Kpler data and doesn't know that Goldman now estimates Iran has already cut crude production by 2.5 million barrels per day since the war began.
